3 small-cap, tech stocks that thrill me

The fourth quarter earnings season, which used to last from mid-January to, say, Groundhog Day, now stretches interminably into late February and even early March.

Credit or blame can be allocated equally to former Senator Paul Sarbanes and former Representative Mike Oxley, whose eponymous legislation passed in 2002.

Sarb-Ox

“Sarbanes-Oxley” made going public and staying there an even more expensive and time-consuming proposition than it already was. More “I”s to dot and more “T”s to cross, I guess.

But a silver-lining of “Sarb-Ox” is the earnings conference call. Yes, public companies have held conference calls for many years.

But thanks to Sarbanes-Oxley (and the rise of the webcast) virtually every public company’s earnings call was now available for your listening pleasure – or your reading pleasure, owing to transcription.

This is especially valuable to money managers like me, who specialize in smaller capitalization companies.

Sure, the entire participant roster of some of these conference calls could fit into a Tesla Model S, but it’s a big improvement from the bad old days of ‘selective disclosure.’

And so here we are in mid-March. Practically every public company has now reported its December quarter and their analysts have raised or lowered 2015 earnings estimates.

Portfolio managers have culled their portfolios, added new positions to replace the dearly departed and even raised their allocations to our favorite names.

My Trio

Rogers is a Connecticut-based maker of printed circuit boards, specialty materials and high-power electronics. On the face of it, Rogers wouldn’t seem to be on the leading edge of technology.

But the nearly 200-year-old company is getting a lift from several major trends, including the voracious appetite for wireless infrastructure and the popularity of hybrid electric vehicles.

Only, instead of needing a brand new product line-up every three months like your typical mobile handset maker, Rogers can work with longer product cycles and still deliver high-technology solutions.

How high-tech? Well, instead of putting the Rogers’ technical ‘chops’ in terms of “nano”-this or “giga”-that, consider its fourth quarter gross profit margins were 39.5%, a nice mark-up and a lot closer to white hot players like NXP Semiconductor (45%) than to even blue-chip contract manufacturers like Jabil Circuit (6%).

R&D Muscle

High gross margins are a measure of product quality and scarcity and reflect well on the 4% of revenues that Rogers is spending on R&D.

Oh, and Rogers’ Q4 gross margins were over two full percentage points higher than in its year-earlier quarter. What else was good about Q4?

Non-GAAP earnings of $0.89, which was not only well ahead of the $0.72 consensus, but also ahead of the company’s own $0.64 – $0.76 guidance.

And its outlook for the current year was sufficiently positive that Street earnings estimates for 2015 have gone from $3.50/share to $3.77 in the last month.

Tech Specialist

Beaverton Oregon-based Cascade develops and sells equipment used by semiconductor makers to test their products while still in wafer form – just after manufacturing but before packaging.

Cascade makes the test machines themselves, plus consumable products used during testing, and provides various installation, training and maintenance services.

In its December quarter, Cascade reported Non-GAAP earnings per share of $0.26, well ahead of the $0.18 analyst consensus. Revenue in the quarter was $36.6 million, a record for the company and in-line with its previous guidance.

Fourth quarter gross margin of 53.4% was near an all-time high and bookings were a record, leading to a 1.27 book:bill ratio.

On its earnings conference call, it provided conservative guidance for its March quarter, owing simply to normal seasonal patterns.

This has caused the share price to retreat, making it even easier to buy shares of a very solid technology supplier.

The investments discussed are held in client accounts as of March 12, 2015. These investments may or may not be currently held in client accounts. The reader should not assume that any investments identified were or will be profitable or that any investment recommendations or investment decisions we make in the future will be profitable.

Author profile

Barry Randall

Crabtree Asset Management invests in growing technology companies. Barry Randall is the firm's founder and chief investment officer. He has more than 20 years of professional investing experience.

Barry spent five years as a technology stock analyst and 10 more years managing mutual funds that focused on small-cap and technology stocks. He has experience managing mutual funds and separately managed accounts as large as $650 million. Prior to earning his MBA in 1993, he spent six years as a professional computer programmer.

Barry earned a Wall Street Journal 'Category King' award for his co-management of a small cap mutual fund in 2006.

As of September 2017, Morningstar rated the Crabtree Multi-Cap Technology composite, of which the strategy offered at Covestor is a component, as having Four Stars for trailing 3-year, trailing 5-year and Overall

Barry has been quoted regularly in Forbes, US News & World Report, TheStreet.com and E-Commerce Times. He has appeared on CNBC, Bloomberg TV and Fox Business News.

Crabtree Asset Management LLC was founded in 2008 and is headquartered in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

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